xt7qz60bwv23 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt7qz60bwv23/data/mets.xml University of Kentucky Fayette County, Kentucky The Kentucky Kernel 19600520  newspapers sn89058402 English  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. The Kentucky Kernel The Kentucky Kernel, May 20, 1960 text The Kentucky Kernel, May 20, 1960 1960 2013 true xt7qz60bwv23 section xt7qz60bwv23 Header Clinics

Today's Weather:
Warm, Showers;
High 77, Low 61

Lazy Professors;
Sec Page 1

University of Kentucky
Vol. LI

LEXINGTON, KY., FRIDAY, MAY 20,

10

No. 113
,

..v.

,:,

......--

.:.;.v.:.:.:

Faculty Ballot To Elect
Trustees Next Week
The final ballot to elect two fac- partment; and Dr. William Ward,
ulty members to the UK Board head of the English Department.
Dr. Lunde said the procedure for
of Trustees will be counted at 4
electing the nonvoting members
p.m. Monday, Dr. Robert O. Lunde,
was set up in a ballot passed by
chairman of Faculty Election Com- the faculty body last month.
mittee, said yesterday.
UK President Frank 0. Dickey
said yesteiday that if the count is
completed by the May Board of
Trustees meeting, the new nonvoting faculty members will attend
the meeting.
The board meeting, originally
scheduled Itr Tuesday, has been
postponed until Wednesday. Dr.
Dickey .said.
With the ballot the faculty will
eliminate one of the three final

candidate.

They are Dr. Aubrey J. Brown,
head of the Department of Agricultural Eccnomlcs; Dr. Thomas
D. Ck.rk. head cf the History De

to be counted on Monday, was put
in the mail yesterday, Dr. Lunde
reported.
Election of the two faculty members to the University Board of
Trustees was required in a law
Following the procedure settle- passed by the I960 Legislature.
ment, 154 nominees were named on
Another law called for open
board meetings.
the first ballot.
"This is a natural thing." Dr.
Lunde said, referring to the election procedure. The six highest were
selected on the second ballot.
Last Monday afternoon
the
field of six was narrowed to three
with the results of the third ballot,
They were Dr. Brown, Dr. C lark,
and Dr. Ward.
Assistant Dean of Women Mrs.
Dr. Morris Scherago, Dr. Ralph
Weaver, and Dr. Stephen Diachun Sharon Hall announced her resigwere the three candidates elimi- nation from the University position yesterday.
nated after third ballot.
Mrs. Hall said she will Join her
The fourth ballot,' the final one
husband in Elizabethtown, Ky. but
has no immediate plans for the

Announces

11010111011

nd

Dox-ology-

Graduating Senior Women
Will Be Honored By Links

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Kappa Mjma pledges Jimmy Wuinxott, left, and Nick Hull start
their i hail up activities at the Georgetown Street Orphanage at
activities, six KS pledges
p ut Ml the fraternity's new
tpeut three nights woiking at the orphanage this week.
pre-initiali-

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Doivn Oti The Farm

If all the animals on UK's Dairy Farm were as eye catching as
Betty Ann Mareum, this week's Kernel Sweetheart, there would
probably be many more agriculture majors. She is a Kappa Kappa
Gamma from Irvine and is majoring in education.

Science Foundation
Gives UK
The University has received National Science Foundation funds
for an extensive undergraduate research program in the College of
Arts and Sciences.
Receipt of the $33,015 grant was
announced yesterday by Dr. Merl
Baker, executive director of the
Kentucky Research Foundation
which will administer the program.
The money will be used to sup-

port

30

full-tim-

undergraduate

e

re-

search participants in a 19 weeks
summer program beginning June
6

and

28

part-tim-

e

participants

during the 1960-6- 1 academic year.
Dr. Jacob R. Meadow, assistant
of the College of Arts and
Sciences and professor of chemistry at UK, will serve as director
of the program, involving 10 departments and 27 professors during the summer and five departments and 10 professors during the
regular academic year.
"This is not a program designed
for the training of technicians or
to serve as a pair of extra hands
for some professor," Dr. Meadow
said.

$35M5

"Seminars, frequent consultation
with professors, written reports,
and close association with graduate research assistants are some of
the things that will be emphasized," he added.
Students selected as participants
must be in good standing with the
dean's office and preferably have
a grade average of B or better. The
students will be paid at a rate of
$1.50 per hour up to a maximum of
$600 during the summer program
Participants in the regular academic year part of the program will
receive up to $150 for both semest- ers for 10 hours per week in
search activity.
The National Science Foundation requires the summer program
participants to devote full time to
research work. They are not allowed to take additional course
re-de-

work.

The Departments of Anatomy
and Physiology, Anthropology, Zoology,
ology,

Bacteriology, Botany,

Ge-

Chemistry, Mathematics,

Physics, and Psychology will
On Page 5

par-Contin-

Kappa Sigs Take First Steps
To Improve Hazing Problems
Kappa Sigma fraternity has taken the lead in
improving the fraternity hazing problem at UK, according to Dr. Kenneth Harper, assistant dean of
men.
week, the Kappa Sigs have
In their
taken steps to have a constructive weei for their
pledges.
John Fitzwater, chairman of the
week, said he feels the pledges are taking part in one
of the "most constructive help week programs ever
held at UK."
Fitzwater outlined the program of the week's activities as follows:
The pledges were recognized at a special parent's
day program Sunduy at the chapter house. The boy's
parents were informed of plans for the

ress In a Books For Asia campaign with a
canvas of a Lexington residental area. The
campaign was originated to collect books to be sent
overseas to several needy countries of Asia, according to Bob Wainseott, SC acting president.
Wainscott said he was "very pleased with the number of books collected by the pledges."
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday nights, the
pledges went to the Georgetown Street Colored
Orphanage to assist in their work.
Supervised by several fraternity members and the
orphanage director, the pledges cut grass, washed
and waxed floors, washed dishes, and painted several
rooms and lawn chairs.
Frank Harrod, Kappa Sig president, added that
the pledges donated two bunk beds to the orphanage.
Saturday's work will include painting and cleanweek.
ing the chapter house. The fraternity's formal InitiaSunday evening, the pledges moved into the house tion is scheduled for Sunday morning.
and attended a three hour study hall supervised by
Bob Gray, chairman of the Interfraternity Council
members of the chapter. These study halU continued committee on hazing, said he was very pleased with
each day throughout the week.
the week's procedure and felt it would be a postive
Monday nilit, the pledges assisted Student Cong step for I'K fraternities to follow.
pre-initiati- on

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future.

Adviser to the Panhellenic Counthe assistant dean said her
resignation will be acted on by the
Board of Trustees at their meeting Wednesday.
The assistant dean of women
is a graduate of the University
The final concert of the Fine Arts Festival will be given by all where she received her M.A. in
UK instrumental and choral organizations at 4:00 p.m. Sunday in education.
Memorial Cclucum.
The program will feature the music of Percy Grainger, who has
devoted much of his time to the
LKD Scholarships
research and collecting of folk cert program will be a work by the
music of Britain, Scandanavia, and modern American composer.
Applications for Little KenLockwood. The 220 voices in
America. Three of his choral comtucky Derby scholarships must be
positions based upon folk songs the choruses will be accompanied turned in to the Dean of Woby the Symphonic Band when they
will be played.
men's Office by Monday, May 23,
,"
sing Lockwood's "The Closing
according to the LKD Steering
The Symphonic Band will perwritten in 1952. The text of Committee.
form the intrada and overture from
the work is the 150th Psalm.
"Music for a Festival" by the contemporary English composer, Gordon Jacob.
The band will also give the first
performance of "A Suite for Band"
by John Edmondson, a graduate
music composition student. The
work was composed during the curThe annual convocation sponMrs. Henry Vance, who is active
rent school year and submitted to sored by Links to honor graduating in local civic affairs, will speak on'
fulfill the thesis requirement for a senior women students will be held "The Responsibility to
Home and
master of music degree.
at 10 a.m. Tuesday in the SUB Family and Community Service."
The University Chorus will sing Ballroom.
Miss Caroline Collier, graduate of
three sacred choral numbers, "Hos-podOld and new members of Links the University, will speak on
Pomilui" by Lvoff. "Ave and the new members of Mortar "Careers."
Maria" by Rachmaninoff, and Board will be student hostesses
Dean of Women Doris Seward
"The Lord is My Strength" by for the reception and program.
will give the introductory remarks.
Demarest.
Mrs.' Frank Dickey and the wives
Miss Sharon Hall, assistant dean
Three works written by Grainger of the college deans will also serve of women, will
discuss the Ameriwill be played by a combination of as hostesses.
can Association of University WoSpeakers on the program will
University choral and instrumental
men.
discuss various prospects open to
groups.
Kay Collier Slone and Kay
The closing selection on the con the graduating senior women.
Kuster, cochairmen of the convocation, will introduce the speakers.

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Festival Concert
Set For Sunday

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Mrs. Hall

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door-to-do-

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* 2--

KENTUCKY KERNEL, TrMay, May 20, 1900

TIIE

Student Art Show Opens Sunday;
Features Work Of Ju Hsi Chou
Approximately 20 prints, drawings, and paintings
ty Ju Hsi Chou. a senior UK art student, will be
featured in a student art show which opens Sunday at 2 p.m. In the Fine Arts gallery.
Chou. who came to UK In 1956 from Formosa,
ha boen nominated for departmental honors and
is a member of Phi Beta Kappa.
In 1957 he ttold a painting for $200 which was
cnlerrd In an art show at Kentucky Wcsleyan College in competition with professional artists.
The first Stylus award for an original drawing
was also awarded to Chou in 1957.
After graduation Chou plans to use a fellowship
from Princeton University for the study of oriental
ait. He then plans to return to Formosa to teach.
This year's show will include paintings, sculptur

AGO

State University was the winner
of the second annual state track
meet, defeating Berea and Wesley-aThe Berea girls who came to
tack their team, cheered all winners loudly.
Headline: All Classes Go One
Year Higher in Chapel
Friday . . . Who Cares
For Exams; Let Joy
Be Unconfined
Final enrollment figures for
State University showed 430 regun.

lar college students and
my students.

183 acade-

An editorial noted that State
University had a successful year

2

STARLITE
DRIVE-I- N
2401 Nicholasville Road
At Stone Road

Sandwiches

O

Fountain

O

Service
For Fast Carry Out Service
Dial

7-19-

or

57

7-99-

95

A Krai Steal
TUCSON. Ariz. (AP) A female
burglar entered a store just after
closing time. A woman passerby
.saw the thief, thought the store
was open and entered.
g
The
burglar
waited on the customer, sold her
$4 in costume jewelry, pocketed
the cash along with other loot,
and escaped.
quick-thinkin-

TENNESSEE WILLIAMS
CONDUCTS ANOTHER CATALYTIC EXPERIMENT
IN SOUTHERN CHEMISTRY!
iyw

-

I

pill

Tau Sigma

LML.

Sandra Tattershall, sophomtfre
education major, has been elected
president of Tau Sigma, modern
dance organization.
Other officers are Lynn Bistick,
vice president: Barbara Solomon,
recording secretary; Julia Barn-har- t,
corresponding secretary; Nor-ri- s
English, treasurer; Tom Black-arbusiness manager; and Sydney Hays, historian.
New Tau Sigma initiates are
Marsha Barbour, Blackard, Diana
Brown, English, Sherry Griffin,
Hays, Charles Henry, Carol Koenig.
Peggy Lewellyn, Judy Lounsberry,
Charles Parker, Judy Secunda,
Miss Solomon, and Sally Storm.

Minm

.iwm

UK Rifleman
Wins Contest

d.

In Ohio
Kentucky varsity rifleman Marshall Turner. Paducah sophomore.
Is the new National Rifle Association regional champion marksman as the result of competition
rifle
in the fifth annual
match at Camp Perry, Ohio.
Turner won his individual championship in a shoot-o- f f at 300
yards with a University of Michigan student after tying at the
ranger with a score
usual
of 229.11 out of a possible 250
points.
The title covered shooting at all
three positions competed in the
prone,
NRA matches
and sitting or kneeling.
The Paducah youth also captured first place in the latter category and, with teammate Tommy
Mueller of Ft. Thomas, combined
n
to take second place in
shooting competition comteam
puted last Sunday.
Eu;ht men comprised the UK
varsity rifle team which co:np"t;d
with approximately 50 other litle-me- n
from eight universities in the
midwest. The UK team is coached
by Col. Glenn Zarger with M. Sgt.
John Morgi.ii as assistant.

Concert Set
For U High
This Saturday

200-ya-

of contemporary
A program
American music will be given by
the Louisville woodwind quintet tomorrow night.
The concert, sponsored ty Phi
Mu Alpha Sinfonia. a music honorary, features members of the Louisville Symphony Orchestra.
Members of the quintet are William Sloan, French horn; Carolyn
Hauptman. oboe; Donald Nelson,
bassoon. Albert Asch, clarinet; and
Frances Fuge, flute.

MARLON

ANNA

mi

With
ROMANCE

FOOTBALL
COMEDY
CLASSES
DRAMA

TRAGEDY
CLASHES
SUSPENSE

K.

PLUS

"Our Man In Havana"

wmwm
SATURDAY

NOW

pichic and election of officers
at 1 p.m. Sunday at
Woodland Park. Tlio.se desiring
transportation should call the Zeta
Beta Tau house, it was announced.

"The Gazebo"
SUNDAY

Over niqhr resrringing service
at Kennedy Book Store

"The Shaggy Dog"

LARRY'S TENNIS

'

Olivia do Haviland in

SERVICE

will be held

"Libel"

Phone
i

h

ITT.
TONIGHT AND SATURDAY
IN COLOR AND CINEMASCOPE
Gary Cooper
Charlton Heiton

"PRINCE AND SHOWGIRL"

'WRECK OF THE MARY DEARE"
ALSO
V- -

imnmi Ann
rUUU

SCHOOL

FOR

TOOLED

Tennis Special

Marilyn Monro - laurcnco Olivor
"WRECK OF THE MARY DARE"
Gary Coopor - Charlton Hton

JOANNE

PLUS

"54-4- 0

OB

11

MRU

Tennessee Williams

nun

kj

for

"Mouse That Roared"

TODAY AND SATURDAY!

r.

A Brilliant Coup
Dick Clark!

rd

MMMM
r

The Campus Set!

two-ma-

Hilk'l Foundation will have its
final semester service at 7:30
o'clock tonight in the YMCA
Chapel of the SUB.

Ir

A MOVIE DATE
ESPECIALLY FOR YOU

off-han- d,

Final Service Sel
By Hillel Group

e?

ENDS SAT.
HOW
8 p.m.
Kim. 73c
Begins

.30-cali-

AIM CONDITIONED

I

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-

Ju Hsi Chou displays one of his paintings which will be on exhibit
in the Student Art Show which opens Sunday in the Fine Arts
Gallery.

A
A,

''Y

.'7-.-!-

Tatlershall
Will Head

A

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y,

in athletics except for basketball.
However, "The girls simply 'cleaned up' with everything," it stated.
Freshmen gave their annual
dance in the Armory. Refreshments were fruit frappe cups served from a rustic well in a corner.
The Mechanical and Electrical
Engineering Department students
planned a weekend picnic at High
Bridge.
25 YEARS AGO
One issue was dedicated to
"Seniors of Today, Relief Workers of Tomorrow." The headline
stated. "Future Relief Workers
Will Receive Sheepskins at Commencement Exercises in Alumni
Gymnasium Friday Afternoon."
10 YEARS AGO
Three girls carried off editorial
Jobs. Nell Blair was to edit the
summer session Kernel; Janet
Anderson to head the fall Kernel,
and Nancy Shinnic to edit the
Kentuckian.
Twenty students were elected to
Phi Beta Kappa.
Carolyn Critchlow was crowned
May Queen.
SGA voted to protest a faculty
ruling requiring graduating seniors to attend classes after senior
grades had been turned in.
The Wildcat baseball team won
the eastern division title in the
SEC and prepared for the playoffs.

O Sea Food

o

ing, drawing, designs, graphic art, and ceramics
which will be representative of a year's work by
the students who have entries in the show.
The 60 paintings which were entered by 15 UK
art students were selected by a panel of Judges comprised of two faculty members and three students.
Mr. Clifford Amyx will give a gallery talk at 2:30
p.m. Sunday on works entered In the show. The
Guggemheim exhibit Will not be removed from the
gallery for the show.
Students who have entries in the show are David
U'cbb, Sally Simpson, Evelyn Llton, Phillip Harris,
Galaor Carbonel, William Haver, David Otis, and
Gail Teterson.
Gwyn McGowan, Medrith Salver. Lave Vogel,
Sandra Fly, Josephine Gatewood, George Ann Gin-leand James MeCormick.

From Our Files

50 YEARS

a

,

z
IN BIO SCREEN CO10RI

.

HELD OVER!

STARTS SUNDAY

Joshua
.

First Area

Presentation

Wednesday At The CIRCLE 25

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11

KVtVl
J

TAYLOR

C.l'it.

ll

EUZAIiTH

laiit

MONTCOMEIY

CLIFT

WAfcMCR
MOS

Anthony

KATHAIINI

HEPBURN

Perkins

Jaae Fonda

r
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V

* THE KENTUCKY KERNEL, Friday, May

20Tl---

3

Gallagher Reveals Red Spying
WASHINGTON, May 19 (AP)
E. OallaRher
D- NJ fald today nearly 103 Russian
fpies, including eight serving in
the Soviet Embassy here, hae
teen apprehended in
countries Since the end of World
War II.

He added in a prepared House
fpeech that all of those cauRht
were prosecuted or deported by the
n&tlons v.'hieh apprehended them,
Gallagher said he has compiled
a box score on Soviet spying which
"maces the U2 Incident look like
ch.!d a play."

Rtp. Cornelius

non-Sovi-

et

He nald 23 of the agents taugrit
were nerving on diplomatic utaffs
of Communist nations or with the
United Nations and thus escaped
prosecution.
The list of the Communist spies
who have been caught, he said, is
only a fraction of the total Involved In spying for the Soviet Union.
Gallagher said it does not include others whose capture may
ot have been revealed nor nearly
15,000 persons he said have been
arrested since World War II for
spying in West Germany.
Gallagher told a reporter his incame from official
formation
sources which he was not at liberty
to identify.
"This list of spy activities cannot l.e complete," he said. "Many
eases are classified. I have tried to
dwiimci! tbis lit with evMenie
supported hy .ictu.il raws of which
th'ie is i.o reasonable doubt.
"This i.ot.-- not take into account
cL'.c .li ei c;.
iioi" case .j which

LITTLE MAN ON. CAM PUS
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TIL KATH

Bobbie
Mason

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HJLS1.

a scries of debates
on Aniciica's "national purpose" whether we lack one, whether we need it, and if .so, what il .should be.
It is clear that America's original "purpose" has degenerated. It has become so diversified that there is no longer a
single thread called unity which the people can or will follow.
On this assumption, there is need for revision. What the
revision should be is not so much a problem as how it can be
done.
Is it possible to stir the vacuous public mind toward one
d
goal?
common,

)

I ill couid

at

looks

w

.u

lioL be p. oven by

the rules of American

tin's wct k is

n

m'nnii)

well-define-

'Completed Society'
Walter Lippman wrote a few months ago: "The critical
weakness of our society is that for the time being our people
do not have great purposes which they are united in wanting
to achieve. The public mood of the country is defensive, to
hold on and to conserve, not to push forward and to create. We
talk about ourselves as if we were a completed society, one
which has achieved its purpose, and has no further great business to transact . . ."
Exactly. This is where it begins to degenerate. Complacency, hyprocrisy, and conformity have leen emphasized to
tleath, and these moods which have so infested our national
spirit have perhaps become trite references. Nearly everyone
has a chocolate-covere- d
definition of what the national purpose
should be, but they are too comfortable under their blanket of
prosperity to get concerned. Again and again the malignant
condition has been pointed out. We laugh and say, "Yes, that's
very true, America is rotten. We should awaken to inner
values." This is as far as it goes.
Our national purpose has obviously been mislaid. Perhaps
lost. William Faulkner asked, "What has happened to the
Ameiican dream? We dozed, slept, and it abandoned us. There
no longer sounds a unilying voice speaking our national hope
and will."

1

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ffA? 32) Uaccv urcrs a ttCVAtf

Atf AND HM A PIZW&KCOMIB

WITH

i PAN&

16-3- 5

THE3E

OJALIFICATlON-SHI- KT

9't COM"

-- 40-'

Social Calendar

FRIDAY, MAY 20
PiKA Formal
Lafayette Hotel
Guignol
"Ah. UildernesH
8:30
Thl Gamma Delta Fiji Island Weekend Walnut Lake Farm
Kappa Sigma
Black & White Formal
Phoenix Hotel
Delta .eta Picnic
Sleepy Hollow
KA Sharecroppers Kali
Danceland
ATt) Aristrolopithecus
Piltman rirnh
.Meriwether's Cabrn
High Bridge
8-- 12

8-- 12

8-- 12

8--

8--

SATURDAY.

rKA CaHn Party
"

"Ah,

Si

r

v.:

ilutrnev

"

MAY

"Sforlighr wilh the
new Oval look, UK gold,
with Starlight faceted
crystal,
$110.00 F.T.I.
shoclc-resiifa-

p.m.
p.m.

Villeminor

P. Edw.
p.m.
p.m.

JEWELER-SILVERSMIT-

Two Locations

p.m.

To Serve You

105 W. Main Street
Phone
Southland Shopping Center
Phone

p.m.

21

Herrington Lake
House
(iiuignol

p.m.
p.m.
:30 p.m.
2
8

8

Plii Tau Formal
Natural Bridge
Kappa Alpha Old South Ball
Spring Valley C'try Club
8Alt) White Tea Rose Dance House
Miss Kentucky Pageant
Henry Clay Auditorium
8
I iji Island Weekend
Walnut Lake Farm
I ambda Chi Weekend
Capital Hotel. Frankfort
1
Cumberland Falls
list' Senior Party
Sig I p Formal
Pine Mountain Lodge
Sl'NDAY, MAY 22
3:30
Memorial Hall
Concert:
Symphonic Hand, I'niversity Choristers,
Glee Clubs, Chorus, Prrcy Grainger,
Guest Soloist and Conductor
l ambda Chi Weekend
Beach Party, Gwynn Island
Fig! Island Weekend
Walnut Lake Farm
1
Herrington Lake
Newman Club Picnic
8--

-l

8--

CLASSIFIED

p.m.
p.m.
p.m.

'

7

Current 'Objectives'

the national objective? Currently, to get as much
as we can and keep it. Happiness is a thing called a Corvette
and a private bar. The American is a
a white-colla- r
W

Tuesday Edition Monday 3:00 p.m.
Wednesday Edition Tuesday 1:00 p.m.
Thursday Edition Wednesday 3:00 p.m.
Friday Edition Thursd.iy 1:00 p.m.
t. fi',1.
fhone Iteverly frdico.

p.m.
p.m.

FOR

SALE-H.-

lawnmower.

md

condtion. Call
FOR

PALE

Good
13.Mtf

Leader

hour delivery.

$115

I'hoije

paper route, l'-- j
net monthly profit.
ia.M4t

KOK SALE

Isctta. Sun roof, leath- er upholstery. l ow miieauo. (iii m.p..
Excellent condition. Inexpensive.
Ed.

p.m.

(juieley

p.m.

190!)

Dept.i.

lEiigii.-- h

18M4t

WANTED
w ishes i uio to Yellowstone National Park or Idaho about
June 1. Will share expen.-c- s.
Call Mr
Moore,
or
after 6 p.m.
WANTED-Stude-

nt

'

17.14t

STAFF- - Men 19

years or older,
for 7 to 10 weeks work with boys camp.
Need counselors, horsemanship and pro- gram directors. Hoom and board plus
S15J to $4'HI tor the season. Contact Mr.
CAM

1'

'

Reams, Lexington Y.MCA, phone

l?M4t
WANTED Ride to central Florida. Will
hare expent.es. Can leave June 2 at

,,ot"-

-

'

fOR RENT
RENT

Small

apartment. Phone

furnished

private
19MHt

TYPING

TYPING Experienced typing
pupem, theiB. Phone

TOMORROW NIGHT
'

YOU DON'T LIKE to

pert

typing of

type do vou!

'

Self-Kealizati-

on

What should the "purpose" be? Obviously there was
something more than farfetched idealism in the wisdom of our
founding fathers. We are in a position now to enjoy our earnHaving attained our
ings.
wealth, we should use it. In
all our comfort, we are no
more satisfied than the serfs
of feuilalistie days.

Ex- -

and

ly.Mtit

LOCATION-LARR-

TENNIS
SERVICE. Woodland Park Tenni Court
after June 1. Now call
or leave
racket for
at Kennedy
Book. Store.
l.M4t
Y'S

CLASSIC CJL'ITAR SOCIETY now being
formed. All interested person invited
to tail
or
or Lexington
Mubjc Studio. 5u3'iU. Euclid
Avenue.

HMUt

ON THE PARIS PIKE

d
outlook, a convertible-drivin- g
worker with a
college hero. He is submerged in a mobilized society with a
network of labor unions and mass communication, progressive
conservatism, and starched lVesbyterianism on Sunday. Americaland of stereotypes, land of bureaucracy.
America's lack of cultural development is one of its outstanding weaknesses, but according to some, there is now a
great "cultural ljooin." People are buying paintings, listening
to good music on the best stereo sets, joining book clubs. Associated with this, howeer, is the same prestige which Vance
Packard identifies with the "status seekers." Culture is perhaps
as much a prestige symbol as a yacht or a swimming pool. This
may be good. It may be bad. Hut it certainly lacks depth.
William 11. White outlines his "organization man" concept, what the American is and is progressing toward. A lar
cry from 177() philosophy, the "organization man" shows that
the disposition to think is escaping us.
Not that the present prosperity
Not cy nicisin-realis- in.
isn't good, but that it isn't enough.

MISCELLANEOUS
NEW

And the Tabic Toppers

Term
ia.M4t

theme, theses,

paper. Reasonable rate. Thone

LITTLE ENNIS

is

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WANTED Ride to New York City on
or after June 7. Will share expenses.
Phone 22t4. Bill Mcyuecn.
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FOR

hat

filter-tippe-

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p.m.

MONDAY. MAY 23

Alpha Lambda Delta Initiation Sl'B

CUilMd AdTrrtLlnr Ka.tr
Kch word .U7 word mlmimun.l .3c
23 per cent discount for ads which run
ruli week.
Oradllnti:

WOULD the two young men who bor
rowed, white chair from Kappj K.ipp.i
Gamma houe bcfoie Chi iktmas please
return it. No question
asked. Mr.
Bui bee, 343 ll.unsoii Ave.
2UMlt

t

VvV '

;

The direction is
The problem is not the
pur: defining of the national
pose but the uniting ol the
public will toward any such
purpose.
The faults blaze before our
eyes. The danger is apathy.
Perhaps we must le virtually
destroyed before our incentive
will be fired. Sputnik appar.
cutly wasn't enough. Nor a
summit failure.

* r

4

Dilemma

Double-Doo- r
In a university of high-pricetextbooks, slave-drivinprofessors, campus noise, ami radical publications,
where students are held in check by
faculty opjK)sition, even nondescript
innovations become appreciated as
d

g

much as springtime or spectacular
weekends.
We refer to the latest University
policy in practiie, which has allevi-

ated confusion and chagrin and
brought joy into our academic drudgery.
All winter we sought refuge from
the snow drifts. Slipping and sliding
down the wintry walks, eventually
we reached a benevolent-lookinbuilding with a double-door- .
Eagerly
we tugged at the door.
g

Always, without fail, one side of
the door was locked the side ttc
pulled first.

When half a double door is loiked
and students are denied full passage
in and out of a building, especially
in streams, half the purpise of a
double-doo- r
is defeated.
But now, with the spring, comes
spring air. And heat. The buildings
become stuffy, overflowing with heat,
and some outlet is necessary.
Therefore we praise whoever had
the initiative to unlock all these
heretofore forbidden doors on campus. It is indeed a radical change.
We only wonder who found the
keys.

Faculty Misconduct
(This editorial was written by a
former Kernel staff member, Hap
Cawood, and was published in his
mimeographed newspaper, the Union
College Icono. Although the article
refers to Union specifically, we think
it is universally applicable.
THE

EDITOR)
Union presents a strange problem
indeed that it is so overloaded with
quality, and students have their
praise suppressed, whether the suppression comes from the students or
the faculty itself.
Undoubtedly, the campus situation has been partly alleviated with
the inauguration of a new and more
outspoken Student Senate and a college president who lives in the 20th
Century.
Rumors take a strange course here
in a perpetual undercurrent of antagonismwhich have all the more
adverse effects if they are not allowed
to be brought into the open for free
discussions.

Take, for instance, the case of the
student being "asked to withdraw"
because he called a teacher a name
and returned with a threat. He was
expelled by the Faculty Conduct
Committee on these grounds. The
students were expected to merely accept it as "an example."
Of whom the example was made,
we digress to comment. However, we
would like to speculate that if the
Faculty Conduct Committee should
be consistent, and had the students
gathered who are keeping the student's accusations alive, expulsions
would be made in bunches, for the
teacher has taken a unique position
in campus jopularity. Furthermore,
the teacher's associates share a similar jjosition, with two or so exceptions.

Then there

is the case of a

student-

who was refused a
"creative" award last year because
he had "loo many chajel cuts." The
intellectual stamina of this decision
is evident. Anyone can see that such
a ruling reflects an unusual precedence of cerebation and is, maybe, even

-playwright

a milestone in the field of logic. Who

but some learned faculty member
could reason with such striking conclusions?
As you see, we agree quite fully.
And we think that this same mature
attitude should be maintained. Each
freshman should be required to memorize two pagan rituals. All who plan
to graduate should know the Apostle's
Creed in Chinese. All physical education majors should have electives in
gospel singing, et al.
As a cynical reader you will probably say we are at odds with the faculty. No. To thev contrary. We are
not insinuating that some teachers
are unutterably dry in their
of subject matter; that
some decide the first day of class
a certain stuin which grade-cast- e
belongs; that some can barely
dent
speak the proper English tongue; that
some order students to teach what the
teacher has been paid to teach; that
some give final grades irrelevant to
previous marks. For us to accuse anyone thusly would be an imaginative
outrage. We wouldn't do it for the
whole damn world.
What we are trying to say is that
some teachers deserve benevolent
criticism. To compliment a teacher
to certain higher authorities would be
to tell someone who couldn't quite
be trusted to keep secrets. This has
happened. The authority has informed the teacher of the student's
praise of him, and almost always the
teacher wants to give the student,
good, undeserved grades.
The campus is a closed shop. "Bad
publicity," it's called, then forced to
half-conveyan-

the underground through the various
hate clubs.
The time is right for an advancement in free thought when the student can associate on the level of
truth with his teachers.
If this won't be allowed, and if
the Faculty Conduct Committee persists in its bliss, maybe the students
should be dismissed so they can go
out and mingle with the cows to
learn something.
From. the higher animals.

The Kentucky Kernel
University of Kentucky

Bill Nlikirk, Editor '
Stewart Hedcer, Sports Editor
Anderson, Managing Editor
Paul Zimmehman and Carole Martin, Assistant Managing Editors
Dick Wake and John Mitchell, Photographers
Alice Akin, Society Editor
Coldfahb and Paul Dykes, Adiertising Managers
Stuart
Beverly Cardwell, Circulation
Perry Ashley, Business Manager
Bob Herndon, Hank Chapman, and Skip Tayloh, Cartoonists
Bob

FIUDAY'S NEWS STAFF

Nolan, Neus Editor

(til

John's

Anne Fike, Aaoiiate

Rf Lew KlKf

right. Just needs polish.

The Readers' Forum
Understand Professors
Apparently the person who wrote
the editorial "Outmoded Testing"
had just been blasted by an objective-type
examination. 1 know I was
ground down by this type of test
yesterday on which the professor (?)
based 30 percent on a chapter which
had not even been discussed in ilass.
(Test was 70 percent objective, 30
percent essay so you can imagine
trying to study for that'.) So, I was
in full agreement with the editorial.
However, I wonder if the author
has ever stopped to consider these
facts about professors:
Some professors teaih as many
as four or live classes. Now, can you
imagine the woik a professor with
this many classes must do to prepare
lor these 15 hours? Well, he has to
prepare a class lcc tin e, for one. Of
course, this does not take into consideration the professors who give the
same course each year using the notes
they compiled for their dissertation,
perhaps. But, some leathers do